>> i don't think that mohamed el baradei represents many people nor do the judges. what the judges reflect is that portion of the population that thought hosni mubarak's regime brought stability to the country and that's why they supported it. the real issue here, i think, is whether morsi comes into confrontation with the egyptian military. he's been trying to pack the military with muslim brotherhood sympathizer by rank and by and large decades of system and training from the the united states, although they obviously supported mubarak, former commander of the air force, they are much more responsive to the united states trying to preserve some possibility here for a legitimate representative government in egypt and i think that's where the clash may come in the coming days. >> that brings in question the timing of morsi's announcement. 24 hours after announcing the cease-fire between israel and hamas he grants himself these near absolute powers, egypt's highest body of judges, they're calling this an unprecedented assault, but is it unprecedented and should it re